Thatched Bed
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Thatched Bed | |
---|---|
Vital statistics | |
Size | 1 x 2 |
Skill(s) RequiredSpecific needed skills.<br>The default skills every hearthling starts off with, Oral Tradition, Primitive Tools & Wilderness Survival), are ignored. | (None) |
Object(s) Required | Thatching Material x6 |
Repaired With | Thatching Material |
Can be Lifted | Yes |
Go to Objects |
Build > Furniture & Decorations > Beds > Thatched Bed
A bed made from thatching material such as boughs or hay. The Thatched Bed is an early alternative to the Sturdy Bed.
Right clicking the bed and selecting 'sleep' will log that character out and return the player to the character selection screen.
They can be made with Reeds which are averaged (not softcapped) by your tool. If you have a high quality tool you will get good quality Reeds, allowing you to make a high quality Thatched Bed much earlier than you'd have cloth for Sturdy Beds.
Purpose
- Beds are used to remove travel weariness and speed up Wound progression - both medicine and wounds.
- Speed depends on bed quality.
- Beds can restore a full bar of SHP within 1-2 real hours, but reduce energy as a result if this happens.
Quality
Bed Quality = {q}AvgThatch
Notes
- Be Aware that if you have a lot non treated dangerous wounds like Adder Bite or Infected Sore they will become worse faster while sleeping in bed and you can eventually die.
Game Development
- Spy-with-Eye (2021-11-21)◎ >"Doubled the base restorations of "Travel Weariness" from sleeping in "Thatched Bed"s or "Sturdy Bed"s."
- Mushroom Circle (2021-02-21)◎ >"Reduced cost of Thatched Bed from 10 to 6 thatching material."
- Sheared Standeeaster (2018-03-28)◎ >"You now heal SHP while sleeping in a bed. This still costs energy, but ignores the Healing level, so you will heal regardless of how much energy you have."
- Exquisite Moodog (2017-09-27)◎ >"Made it so that sleeping in Beds heals wounds faster, and more so the more quality the bed has. This works by effectively burning through the wounds and their effects faster, so infected sores may, for example, grow faster from this, as they simply check for growth or reduction more frequently."